In about a weeks time, CES 2019 will kick off, and it’s all but certain AMD will be at the very least announce key details concerning the Ryzen 3000 series of CPUs (known as Matisse). These processors will, of course, feature the 7nm Zen 2 architecture, and according to whispers in the industry, we’ll.

Whilst computer enthusiasts in the desktop arena are celebrating the price and performance of AMD’s Ryzen series of processors, the professional and server market has also undergone significant upheaval thanks to the company introducing the Epyc series of processors. Currently, the Epyc series of CPUs are based on the original Zen 14nm architecture, but.

Intel’s Coffee Lake series of processors currently has a total of six different SKUs available, but a plethora of new chips will be released over the coming months, and these range from the lower end Celeron and Pentium chips to the higher performance echelons of the processors. Intel’s MDDS (Material Declaration Datasheet) has officially confirmed.

Another day, another AMD Ryzen piece of news. This time, Videocardz.com managed to get their hands on the first pictures of the new Ryzen processors, in their ready-to-ship form. As well as photos of the front of the CPU, which shows that AMD are sticking with the logo for the final design, we also.

In the next few months, AMD will release their Ryzen range of processors, threatening to a total shake-up of the gaming and enthusiast processor space. Ryzen sports a radically different design to AMD’s current range of CPUs, overhauling cache systems, introducing SMT and adding in advanced code prediction technologies. AMD claim’s the culmination of.

2016 has been a pretty great year for technology enthusiasts, and for folks with an interest in processors the past couple of months have been particularly interesting. There’s been no shortage of news, rumors and leaks on AMD’s upcoming next generation processor architecture, Zen. Now we have yet more information on AMD’s upcoming Summit.

If you’ve been following along with us at RedGamingTech for a few months, you’re probably intimately familiar with AMD’s upcoming next generation processor known as Zen. The CPU is being designed from the ground up as a scaleable, high performance X86 processor for use in the traditional desktop, low per solutions such as laptops.

There’s a pretty damn good chance you’ve heard of AMD’s Zen processor if you’ve even a passing interest in the tech industry for the past year or two. It represents the companies hopes to design a high performance processor from practically the ground up, and compete with Intel across a variety of platforms –.

Despite both Skylake and the upcoming Kaby Lake both running on the same socket type, there were fears that Kaby Lake wouldn’t be backwardly compatible with the 100-series motherboard chipsets, and Intel were being pretty damn quiet on the issue too. But we’ve finally have confirmation that should mean that current LGA 1151 platform.

If you’re a technology lover, it’s hard to not be interested in AMD’s upcoming next generation processor architecture – Zen, which marks a radical departure from the companies older processor designs found in the current Excavator series. As someone who has been following the PC industry since the mid 90’s (yeah, I was pretty.

Let’s be honest, right now if you’re contemplating upgrading your PC in the next few months, chances are pretty high AMD’s new Zen processors) are in the contenders pile. Around CES 2017 we’ll see the AM4 platform be made available through traditional retail channels, but as of right now, AM4 is only available through.

AMD are back in the PR limelight, dominating much of the technology and gaming talk with their upcoming Zen architecture. Enthusiasts debate on the performance of the processor, speculate the price points (particularly when it comes to Summit Ridge, the Zen based platform for the desktop) and how their chips will stack up against.

There’s a pretty good chance if you’re a PC gamer or power user, you’ve more than a passing interesting in AMD’s upcoming Zen processor lineup. It is a radical redesign and new approach for AMD’s processor lineup; and while company are touting Zen as more than just Summit Ridge (the desktop platform), but for.

A new report detailing AMD’s upcoming AM4 platform (which will be used in the companies Zen lineup of CPU’s) has emerged and shows the company will be making some rather big changes to the platform compared to previous designs. AMD will abandon their previously used OPGA socket and instead switch to µOPGA, this revision might.

A set of benchmarks said said to be from the Skylake-s flagship I7-6700K processor have emerged, comparing it to Intel’s own I7-4790K Devil Canyon. As we’ve covered in the past, the 6700K and the 6600K will both be launched August 5th (during Gamescon), kick-starting both Skylake and the Z170 chipset based motherboards. The setup.

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